fy 2020-21 budget one dallas: responsible, equitable
TRANSCRIPT
FY 2020-21 BudgetOne Dallas: Responsible,
Equitable, Accountable, Legitimate (R.E.A.L.)
Change andR.E.A.L. Action
Kimberly Bizor TolbertChief of Staff
Elizabeth ReichChief Financial Officer
August 19, 2020
Overview• R.E.A.L. Action• Resilient Dallas 2.0• FY21 investments• Building on prior investments• Remaining FY21 budget timeline
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“We can’t ask or expect law enforcement to do it all. When we’re
faced with a problem, we come together as a city and
we solve it.”– Mayor Eric Johnson
R.E.A.L. Action• Making communities safer goes far beyond policing• Requires acknowledging historical actions that produced
inequitable conditions today and committing to provide resources and services to address them
• FY21 budget does this by:• Investing resources in basic needs like jobs, housing, and access to
food and health care• Building and maintaining infrastructure in unserved and underserved
neighborhoods• Increasing physical and digital accessibility to facilities and information• Strengthening core City services
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Resilient Dallas 2.0
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Goal 1: Advancing Equity
Goal 2: Welcoming City
Goal 3: Economic Mobility
Goal 4: Equitable Access
Goal 5: Healthy Communities
Goal 6: Neighborhood Infrastructure
Goal 7: Environmental Sustainability
Goal 8: Public Safety
FY21 Investments: Youth Support• Engage Dallas youth by expanding recreational and cultural
programming, mentoring relationships, job training, health initiatives, and fun educational activities
• Reintroduce Youth Support Services Division in Park and Recreation inApril 2021
• Umbrella for Teen Recreation (TRec) program• Virtual teen center in collaboration with Office of Arts and Culture, Library, and Youth
Commission• Partner with Dallas College on job readiness/apprenticeship and community health programs• Work with DPD to create opportunities for relationships with police officers in
non-law enforcement contexts• Create referral program for youth at risk of entering the juvenile justice system or dropping out
of school• $500K and three positions
• New youth center at Vickery Park branch library opening Fall 2020• Transition Youth Commission from Office of Government Affairs to the City
Manager’s Office
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FY21 Investments: Workforce Development• Prepare residents for emerging job growth sectors and reentry
into job market• Merge business and workforce development efforts from Business
Diversity, Community Care, and Homeless Solutions into single Business and Workforce Inclusion team in Office of Economic Development
• Collaborate with community and business stakeholders• Roll out the Broadening Urban Investment
to Leverage Dallas (B.U.I.L.D.) program• Strengthen small and minority- and women-
owned businesses• Provide access to technical training, funding,
mentorship, and capacity-building guidance
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FY21 Investments: Minimum Wage• Lead by example by increasing the minimum wage
• Increase to $14 per hour in FY21 and $15 per hour in FY22 for permanent City employees
• 454 employees at $0.8M (all funds) in FY21• 665 employees at $1.4M (all funds) in FY22
• Maintain pay for part-time, seasonal, and temporary employees at $0.50 above MIT living wage ($12.88 per hour)
• 324 employees at $200K (all funds) in FY21
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FY21 Investments: Comprehensive Planning• Refine the Comprehensive Housing Policy to better meet
residents’ housing needs• Change terms of some loans from repayable to forgivable• Create a targeted home rehabilitation program• Activate vacant land in City’s portfolio and increase supply of
affordable housing through Land Transfer Program• Launch affordable housing nexus study
• Advance Citywide strategic priorities and implement a monitoring program to measure success
• Draft major update to the forwardDallas! Comprehensive Plan by October 2021
• Draft Hensley Field Reuse and Redevelopment Master Plan and three major new area plans to serve as basis for rezoning in 2022
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FY21 Investments: Eviction Diversion• Alleviate financial hardship through an eviction diversion
program• Connect tenants facing eviction to resources from housing assistance
and direct legal services to financial education• Develop written resources and training for tenants, landlords,
attorneys, and court administrators• Partner with nonprofits to provide direct legal services• Funded by CARES Act ($500K)
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FY21 Investments: Financial Empowerment• Pilot two Financial Empowerment Centers
• Community-based centers that offer financial coaching, employment referrals, mental health services, and housing support
• Help low-income residents navigate out of poverty and achieve financial stability
• Providing $1M and one position to Office of Community Care in FY21 and $1.6M in FY22
• Meet residents’ basic needs with direct assistance• Includes rent and utility assistance, food distribution, benefits
navigation, and clothing/uniform distribution• $1.25M to Community Care and $250K to Information and Technology
Services for system support to enable interagency referrals
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FY21 Investments: Food Access• Increase access to affordable and nutritious food
• Purchase Save a Lot on Simpson Stuart Road for Project Food Access• Partner with nonprofits to provide curbside pickup and grocery delivery
services• Implement two Comprehensive Environmental and Climate Action
Plan (CECAP) actions to create a Food Advisory Council (FA2) and present a special events ordinance to CityCouncil that encourages procurement of localfood and multiple waste management options,including recycling and composting (FA14)
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FY21 Investments: Senior Care• Continue caring for our seniors
• Maintain contract with DART to provide medical transportation to residents aged 65 and older or with a disability through 2022
• Retain partnership with Texas A&M University College of Dentistry to provide free dental care to low- and moderate-income residents aged 60 and older
• Continue current funding for Senior OmbudsmanProgram, which gives seniors in long-term carefacilities an official voice
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FY21 Investments: Water/Wastewater Service• Set aside $2.9M annually to extend water and wastewater
infrastructure to all residents in unserved areas within the next 10 years
• 46 occupied unserved areas at cost of $33M• Support through dedicated 0.5% increase in Dallas Water Utilities
street rental fee
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CouncilDistrict
Number of Occupied Unserved
Areas
Approximate Water Cost
Approximate Wastewater
CostTotal Cost
1 2 $0 $750,000 $750,0002 1 0 438,000 438,0003 11 894,000 11,015,000 11,909,0004 3 0 705,000 705,0005 1 0 233,000 233,0006 2 0 912,000 912,0007 3 0 3,782,000 3,782,0008 23 506,000 13,717,000 14,223,000
9-14 0 0 0 0Total 46 $1,400,000 $31,552,000 $32,952,000
FY21 Investments: Increasing Accessibility• Dedicate $5.8M to equitable investments in streets, alleys,
sidewalks, and other infrastructure• Target underserved neighborhoods, schools, and senior centers• Partially funded by new 4% Storm Drainage Management franchise fee• Support maintenance/repair methods that extend useful life of streets
• Increase accessibility for residents with disabilities• Implement Sidewalk Master Plan with
$9.4M in bond funds• Update City facilities in compliance with
the Americans with Disabilities Act
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FY21 Investments: Equity and Inclusion• Integrate the City’s equity, resilience, inclusion, fair housing,
and human rights initiatives in the Office of Equity and Inclusion• Increase funding to implement ADA mandates
issued by DOJ to make City programs and services more accessible to people with disabilities ($255K)
• Add one position to assist with equity-relatedoperations ($76K in FY22)
• Add one position to implement LanguageAccess Plan ($84K in FY22)
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FY21 Investments: Language Access• Establish City as a trusted primary source for information and
ensure residents with limited English proficiency have equal access to programs and services
• $31K for new Virtual Language Center in Communications, Outreach, and Marketing to provide Citywide translation services
• Add four positions to 311 in FY21 and four more inFY22 for Spanish-speaking agents
• Maintain LanguageLine contract, on-demandphone translation services in 230+ languagesfor 311 and DPD
• $118K in FY22 for Spanish-language feature on311 website
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FY21 Investments: Fair Park Multimedia Center• Launch the Multimedia Center at Fair Park
• Magnify the impact of City programs and services and bolster resilience through additional digital communications capacity
• Partner with UNT Dallas, Dallas College, Paul Quinn College, and DISD Lincoln Early High School to pilot multimedia production apprenticeship program
• Broadcast an all-Spanish City television channel in 2021• Transfer one position from DPD to manage Multimedia Center• $54K for operations and maintenance
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FY21 Investments: Bridging the Digital Divide• Begin to bridge the digital divide
• 3,000 mobile hot spots and 100 Chromebooks available for checkout at select libraries
• Open two state-of-the-art branch libraries• Vickery Park will open in Fall 2020 as an additional branch facility and
feature a youth center with cutting-edge technology• Funding initiated in FY20• $846K full-year funding in FY21
• Forest Green will open in Spring 2021 and replace the original facility that opened in 1976 and is the smallest branch facility in the library system
• Funding initiated in FY20• $241K full-year funding in FY21
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FY21 Investments: Fire-Rescue Response• Augment our fire-rescue response by hiring 21 new firefighters
to fully staff Fire Station #59 (scheduled to open inSeptember 2021)
• $3.71M in FY21• Operate a ladder truck at Fire
Station #18 to respond more efficiently to multi-story structure fires in downtown
• $2.28M in FY21
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FY21 Investments: Sanitation Services• Reduce emissions, improve air quality, and further waste
reduction and collection efficiency goals in the CECAP• Charge a fee for brush or bulky trash that does not meet set-out
requirements to offset additional collection costs (beginning 10/1/20)• Increase the landfill disposal (tipping) fee by 20% to $34.20/ton• Develop additional changes for City Council
consideration in FY21• Separate collection of brush/bulky trash• Increased use of automated trucks
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FY21 Investments: Environmental Action• Initiate other immediate and short-term actions identified in the
(CECAP), including forming a community advisory group, implementing recommendations from the Urban Forest Master Plan, and developing an urban agriculture plan
• $500K in FY21 for Office ofEnvironmental Quality andSustainability
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Building on Prior Investments• Create Data Analytics team that will harness data to support
decision-making throughout the organization and distill results into content the public can easily access and consume
• Inventory data assets and centralize all City data—one source, one message• Eliminate silos and streamline software, tools, and training• Create user-friendly tools and analytics that we can use to reduce racial and
socioeconomic inequities• Transfer 24 positions and $2.46M from Information and Technology Services,
Innovation, and Transportation; add three positions and $259K in FY21• Align strategic planning and internal management consulting in
Budget and Management Services• Target savings of $1M through Citywide process improvements• Coordinate Citywide and departmental planning initiatives• Improve accountability and allocation of resources through enhanced
performance measurement• Analyze cost/benefit of selected current and future programs
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Building on Prior Investments• Reorganize payroll processing team to decrease processing
time and reduce errors• Restructure into four dedicated teams: uniform payroll, civilian payroll,
payroll accounting, and timekeeping• Optimize Workforce, Kronos, and Telestaff and leverage system
functionality for greater efficiency• Eliminate employees working overnight to process payroll • Increase auditing, resulting in fewer errors• Respond more quickly to issues
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Building on Prior Investments• Strengthen Building Services’ preventive maintenance program
and implement proactive energy conservation policies• Use technology to regularly and systematically inspect roofing systems
to identify and address small issues before they require larger, more expensive repairs
• Continue to enhance the work order management system to eliminate duplicate data entry
• Conduct energy audit of City facilities to identify opportunities for reducing operating costs
• Add low-cost retrofits to reduce energy consumption (ex. motion sensors for lights) and optimize heating/cooling system operations through continued automation and remote monitoring
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Building on Prior Investments• Created new Office of Integrated Public Safety Solutions to break
down departmental silos by coordinating services in high-risk areas• Increase efficiency in nuisance abatement through proactive investigation
with Community Prosecution• Address environmental conditions such as poor lighting, blight, and quality of
life issues through the Rapid Response Team• Directly manage the RIGHT Care and Mobile Crisis Response teams to
increase responsiveness• Facilitate the violence interrupters program to resolve conflicts and increase
community engagement• Expanded online and phone reporting for DPD
• Created efficiencies and aligned with best practices• Currently capture 7% of all dispatched calls for service (40K+ calls annually)• Equivalent of 37 additional patrol officers (FTE)• FY21 target is to capture 100% of eligible calls (about 11% of all dispatched
calls for service)
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Building on Prior Investments• Restructured delivery of library resources
• Completed Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) conversion at all 28 branch libraries; only 3 floors remaining at Central Library
• Installed Automated Materials Handling (AMS) in November 2019 to move materials throughout the system more efficiently
• Initiated Library to Go curbside service• Staff has pulled almost 128K requested items since June• Completed more than 27K appointments for pickup at 17 curbside locations
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Building on Prior Investments• Maintaining service levels in Sustainable Development and
Construction• Electronic plan review system allowed DEV to continue service
delivery during COVID-19• Prior to pandemic, 20% of applications were submitted electronically• Increased to 90% in the past three months• Reviews performed concurrently by multiple teams (building code, zoning,
engineering, etc.) rather than routing sequentially• Hosting virtual pre-development meetings to avoid in-person visits
• Allows multiple disciplines to participate from their desks• Meetings recorded for reference and notes presented to clients within one week
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Timeline
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Date ActivityAugust 13-27 Budget town hall meetings (virtual)
August 19 Budget Workshop: R.E.A.L. Change and Action (part 2)
August 26 Budget public hearing
September 2 Budget Workshop: Council amendments (straw votes anticipated)September 9 Budget Workshop: Adopt budget on first reading
September 16 Budget Workshop: Council amendments (if necessary); notice of public hearing on property tax rate for 2020 tax year (if necessary)
September 23 Budget Workshop: Public hearing on tax rate (if necessary); adopt tax rate; and adopt budget on second reading
October 1 Begin FY21
financialtransparency.dallascityhall.com
Appendix
• Remediate blighted buildings and abandoned lots inhigh-violence locations
• Add outdoor lighting in locations where nighttime violence has been most severe
• Utilize schools to deliver group support that teaches kids to pause before they act
• Hire and train credible messengers from within high-violence neighborhoods as “violence interrupters” to keep resolvable conflicts from escalating into gun violence
Strategic Alignment: MTFSC
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Strategic Alignment: Economic Development• BHAGs
• Decrease ratio of property values and land mass through impactful investing to reflect balanced growth between north and south
• Resource mixed-income neighborhoods for equitable prosperity• Companies choose Dallas because of its talented and skilled people
• Equity Indicators• Long-term residential vacancies• Homeownership• Evictions• Housing cost burden• Adults with no high school diploma• College-educated adults
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Strategic Alignment: Environment & Sustainability
• BHAGs• Worldwide leader in clean, sustainable land, air, and water• Clean neighborhoods through equitable stewardship of solid waste
• Equity Indicators• Chronic disease• Sense of community
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Strategic Alignment: Government Performance• BHAGs
• National leader in municipal technology and data• 100% of City assets and infrastructure in good repair by 2035• Achieve AAA credit rating
• Equity Indicators• Government service satisfaction
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Strategic Alignment: Housing & Homelessness Solutions
• BHAGs• Attractive, affordable, and available housing• Creative and transformative use of City-owned land for safe,
connected communities• National model for functional zero homelessness
• Equity Indicators• Housing cost burden• Homeownership• Home loan denials• Long-term residential vacancies• Working poverty• Evictions
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Strategic Alignment: Public Safety• BHAGs
• Safest city for youth to succeed• Safest, resilient large city with coordinated and engaged partnerships• National leader in rehabilitation and diversion programs
• Equity Indicators• Juvenile detentions• Fines and fees• Jail admissions• Arrests• Traffic stops and searches• Sense of community• Long-term residential vacancies
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Strategic Alignment: Quality of Life, Arts, & Culture• BHAGs
• Recognized leader as age-friendly, livable city• Premier destination for arts and culture• National model for youth development, outreach, and mentorship
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• Equity Indicators• Senior poverty• Homeownership• Housing cost burden• Utility expenses• Sense of community• Chronic disease
• Child poverty• Middle school suspensions• College readiness• Juvenile detentions• Teen pregnancy• Sense of community
Strategic Alignment: Transportation & Infrastructure
• BHAGs• Leader in stress-free mobility options for everyone• World-class infrastructure known for quality, reliability, and equitable
delivery• Equity Indicators
• Commute time• Transit frequency• Street quality
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Strategic Alignment: Workforce, Education, & Equity• BHAGs
• National model for future-proof workforce• Most equitable city in the U.S.• Access to quality education for all students
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• Equity Indicators• Labor force non-participation• Unemployment• High-growth, high-paying
employment• Median hourly wage• Early education enrollment by
race/income• Kindergarten readiness• Third-grade reading proficiency
• Elementary and middle school academic quality
• College readiness• High school dropouts• Distinguished Achievement
Program (DAP) graduates• Child food insecurity• Internet access• Sense of community